LOS ANGELES — Thursday night was the kind of scene the Los Angeles Clippers have dreamed about for nearly a decade: a raucous, sold-out crowd erupting in cheers following the first playoff win in their own arena.
After taking a resounding 2-1 lead in their first-round series against Denver, the Clippers are the NBA championship contender that no one predicted.
And it has been made possible by the career renaissance few saw coming.
In recent weeks, Kawhi Leonard has looked every bit the elite scorer and perimeter defender the Clippers thought they were getting in 2019 when Leonard, weeks removed from earning the second NBA Finals MVP honor of his career, signed with the Clippers in a free-agency coup.
Yet that was six years ago, a lifetime in a league where championship windows open rarely and close quickly.
“The best thing for him was taking the summer off and getting right,” said an executive from a rival team. “I just can’t believe how skinny he looks. He just looks like he’s so much lighter and moving so much better and playing back to the way he was before. It’s just amazing.”
Leonard has looked this dominant in the postseason before while in a Clippers uniform, starting in 2021. But during a second-round series against Utah, just as Leonard and Paul George were playing their best as teammates, Leonard took an innocuous bump from Utah’s Joe Ingles on a fast break and missed the rest of that postseason, and the entire 2021-22 season, as well, with a knee injury that required surgery.